To me, methought, who waited with a crowd,
There came a bark that, blowing forward, bore
King Arthur, like a modern gentleman
Of stateliest port; and all the people cried,
"Arthur is come again: he cannot die."

"Morte d'Arthur" (1842)
Alfred, Lord Tennyson

Sunday, July 18, 2021

Arthuriana Spring 2021 Contents


The latest issue:

Arthuriana, Vol. 31, No. 1

Spring 2021

Source: http://www.arthuriana.org/access/31-1Contents.html.

(The journal can be purchased from the press and viewed at Project MUSE. It is also archived on JSTOR behind a moving wall.)


Table of Contents

‘Truth as They Heard’: Fama in Sir Thomas Malory’s Le Morte Darthur  
Louis J. Boyle 3




The Second Coming of King Arthur: Conspirituality, Embodied Medievalism, and the Legacy of John F. Kennedy  

Ellie Crookes

32

 

 
The Romance Forests of Medieval Iceland  
Maj-Britt Frenze

56


 

 
Love out of Measure: Comparing Malory’s Palomides and Lancelot  
Dana Omirova

78


 

 
Winner of the ‘Fair Unknown’ Award
They ‘Laȝed . . . Þoȝ Þey Lost’: Laughter in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight  
Jennifer Fast

92


 

 
 
REVIEWS  
 
Simon Armitage, Pearl: A New Verse Translation  
Ryan Buchanan Allen 116


 
María Odette Canivell Arzú, Literary Narratives and the Cultural Imagination: King Arthur and Don Quixote as National Heroes
Juan Miguel Zarandona 117


 
Glenn D. Burger and Rory G. Critten, eds., Household Knowledges in Late-Medieval England and France  
Wesley Chihyung Yu 119


 
Benjamin A. Saltzman, Bonds of Secrecy: Law, Spirituality, and the Literature of Concealment in Early Medieval England  
Craig R. Davis 121


 
Charles Russell Stone, The roman de toute chevalerie: Reading Alexander Romance in Late Medieval England  
Su Fang Ng 122



 

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